Best Buy's Geek Squad: Conquest of Branding Over Competence

Warning - Using the Geek Squad May Be Harmful to Your Computer

Face it, the brilliance of  American business is not perfecting quality of products and services, it is in marketing, advertising, and branding.  That is what the Geek Squad is all about.  They have niffty language, make their agents wear uniforms and drive the cutest
 little cars covered with advertising.  They say that: "Our mission is to alleviate the world's computer problems, educate people to fearlessly embrace technology and practice the art of human interaction."  Sounds so noble.  Their real mission is to make money, which is just fine if their services were top quality.  But my own experience and that of many others who have shared their pain on many Internet sites is that the youthful Geek Squad agents have nice personalities but lack technical competence.  The result is that when customers expose their prized computers to their agents, because they need technical help, they put themselves at risk.

Computers have become so crucial in our lives and when things go wrong it is like becoming seriously ill.  So naturally your instinct is to seek professional help.  But the Geek Squad does seem to adhere to the wisdom of health professionals: first do no harm.  

One of the Geek Squad's standard services is called data transfer.  Simply put, copy data from an old computer to a new one.  For that they charge plenty.  So what might be the worst case scenario or nightmare of having the Geek Squad come to your home to perform this job.  Think a minute.  What happened to me is that they destroyed the hard drive of my old computer and I lost the hard drive in it and, worse yet, lost over five years of all kinds of data and files.

And an interesting aspect of the Geek Squad business model is that if something bad happens and you have to bring something into a Best Buy store they do not allow their agents to physically take anything back to their store.  In my case, I had to take back my old computer box, wait several days and then learn that they had destroyed my hard drive and data.

Related information
  • Never Mind the Clip-On Ties, Geek Squad Can Fix Your PC found on  NYTimes Online.Father Dan: Why Best Buy and Geek Squad Suck found on Daniel Curran.com
 
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What I see with this issue is someone who was disappointed because he doesn't live in a perfect world and wants to blame the most convenient person for his woes and consequently get money for it. This is an epidemic in America. Everyone wants to sue everyone else because they are too amped up on their own ego to admit their own mistakes. Here you are blaming this poor guy who was only trying to help, without any proof that anything was his fault at all, just because you believe the bullshit that is fed to you. There are bad apples in any industry, in any company, but by no means does that make everyone bad apples. Even if it does, the fact that you believe the bullshit and STILL went to Best Buy anyway makes you a complete moron and/or complacent in your own hard drive's failure.

Posted on 03/20/2009 at 2:03:07 AM

There are a lot of posts here about who's at fault. The only story we know seems to be that he didn't back up for 5 years because he didn't know how/didn't think it was necessary. He hired an agent to ATTEMPT a data transfer. Key word is attempt. This does not guarrantee the data is recoverable, but if it is not, his money is refunded. Unless it can be proven that the agent did something to directly cause the hard drive to fail without the majority of the problem being its age (which is highly unlikely, unless he dropped it, bore a hole with a screwdriver, etc), then there is no issue. With ANY SERVICE WHATSOEVER, including diagnostics, data transfers, hardware upgrade, even a simple virus removal, there is always a possibility of losing data. ALWAYS. A technician can attempt to recover data off the hard drive, but if he cannot, well its not his fault, its nobody's fault but the hard drive itself. The fact that the data was never backed up is your fault, however.

Posted on 03/20/2009 at 2:03:48 AM

There are a lot of posts here about who's at fault, speculating about what happened, etc. The only story we know seems to be that he didn't back up for 5 years because he didn't know how/didn't think it was necessary. He hired an agent to ATTEMPT a data transfer. Key word is attempt. This does not guarrantee the data is recoverable, but if it is not, his money is refunded. Unless it can be proven that the agent did something to directly cause the hard drive to fail without the majority of the problem being its age (which is highly unlikely, unless he dropped it, bore a hole with a screwdriver, etc), then there is no issue. With ANY SERVICE WHATSOEVER, including diagnostics, data transfers, hardware upgrade, even a simple virus removal, there is always a possibility of losing data. ALWAYS. A technician can attempt to recover data off the hard drive, but if he cannot, well its not his fault, its nobody's fault but the hard drive itself. The fact that the data was never backed up is your

Posted on 03/20/2009 at 2:03:20 AM

Alex, You should actually use your TV 80+ hours before calibrating it. I just got it done and it makes a world of difference. NY times actually did a whole article on how much it cuts down on your electric bill and improves the life of your TV.

Posted on 02/03/2009 at 9:02:45 AM

I've had so many problems in the past with geek squad, with products purchased in best buy as well as just tech issues with my computers. I recently found a new company, called Nerd Force. The guys are new, but pretty good. I don't think they're available everywhere yet, but if you go to their website you can enter your zip and see if they service your area. Check em out, www.nerdforce.com.

Posted on 02/02/2009 at 7:02:10 AM

Geek Squad is a disgrace! I purchased a home theatre calibration with Geek Squad (over $300!), and was naive enough to let them take payment before the actual service delivery. It took them 3 months to schedule the service! (they are using customers to fund their business) Then they never showed up! I had to call them after waiting for 4 hours to hear that the "technician was sick" (obviously a lie) I have tried to cancel the service but they're making it impossible for me also!

Posted on 01/04/2009 at 10:01:04 AM

Each computer user is responsible for his or her own data, period. If, as stated that this data was really vital and you had the computer for 5 years and never backed it up that is a problem that you need to own up to yourself. Never backed up for 5 years, the data couldn't have been very important. Dummy!

Posted on 10/21/2008 at 7:10:46 PM

I think its funny that people think we just replace the hard drive for no reason. The only time we replace a hard drive is if it fails some sort of diagnostics. Whether it be the built in diagnostics with HP's and Dells, the test and diagnostics discs for Toshiba's, or the MRI diagnostic tool standard to the squad. No we don't have to replace them when they fail one of these tests but these tests serve as a safe guard so your hard drive does not crash and lose the data totally. And yes HP, Dell, Gateway, and Toshiba use the Geek Squad for their manufacturers warranty repairs.

Posted on 10/15/2008 at 6:10:52 PM

You are very rude and sound like you are fourteen years old. YOU NEED TO IMPROVE YOUR VOCABULARY.

Posted on 10/11/2008 at 9:10:39 PM

You are very rude and sound like you are fourteen years old. YOU NEED TO IMPROVE YOUR VOCABULARY.

Posted on 10/11/2008 at 9:10:31 PM

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